NEW DELHI, Nov 6: The Supreme Court Friday asked the Centre to ensure there is no smog in Delhi-NCR as it was informed that the commission for air quality management will start functioning from today.
A bench of Chief Justice S A Bobde and Justices A S Bopanna and V Ramasubramanian posted the pleas related to air pollution for hearing after the Diwali vacation.
The Centre on Thursday appointed former Chief Secretary of Delhi M M Kutty chairperson of the Commission for Air Quality Management (AQM) in National Capital Region and Adjoining Areas.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Centre, informed the bench that the Commission will start functioning from Friday and the government has appointed the members.
While referring to the recent ordinance on Air Pollution, Mehta said that he would place it on record.
The bench told the Solicitor General that he may place it on record but the court will hear the matter after Diwali vacation.
“The only thing is that you ensure that there is no smog in the city. We are not concerned with commission. There are many commissions and many brains are working but just ensure that there is no smog in the city,” the bench said.
Mehta replied that government is taking all efforts on war footing.
Senior advocate Vikas Singh, appearing for petitioner Aditya Dubey, said the chairman of the commission is a bureaucrat and it could have been a retired judge of the HC. “There is no member from the Union health ministry,” he said.
The bench said the commission can talk to anybody in the country.
Singh contended that there is no classification of offence and Rs 1 crore fine and five year jail is a little bit arbitrary.
The bench pointed out that all offences in the ordinance are non-cognizable, to which Singh replied that these are cognizable.
It told Mehta that there is no grading of offence to which he said that government will like to respond to it.
“We don’t want to advise. These are all knowledgeable people and there are NGO people also,” the bench said.
Mehta pointed that there are experts from the field besides members from NGOs in the newly created commission and they will all start working from Friday.
Singh added that the situation today is almost of a public health emergency and something drastic needs to be done.
The bench said, “We are a court of law. This is a problem which has to be dealt with by the executive. They have the money, the power and the resources for this. We are not abdicating our responsibility or functions but understand this, we have some limitations”.
Singh said that by the time court will reopen after vacation, it (pollution) may all be over.
The bench said that it will keep the matter on reopening after the Diwali vacation.
On October 29, the top court was informed by the Centre that it has come out with an Ordinance on curbing pollution and it has been promulgated already.
The top court had said that it would have to look at the Ordinance before passing any direction in the matter which has raised issues regarding pollution caused due to stubble burning in neighbouring states of Delhi.
The apex court had on October 26 kept in abeyance its earlier order appointing one-man panel of retired apex court judge Justice Madan B Lokur to monitor the steps taken by neighbouring states to prevent stubble burning which is a major cause of pollution in the Delhi-national capital region (NCR). (PTI)
“Some experts have informed us informally that it is not only stubble burning that creates pollution,” the CJI had said.
“We would like you to stop using your beautiful cars. Which you won’t. We should all go about on bikes — not motorbikes but bicycles,” the CJI had observed.